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 SHANGHAI: The yuan was little changed on Wednesday, as uncertainty about the eurozone debt crisis kept the market in a wait-and-see posture.

Relatively small changes in the central bank's daily fixings over the last week, despite the spot rate trading 0.6-0.8 percent weaker suggest that authorities are willing to tolerate a moderately weak yuan, traders say.

The People's Bank of China (PBOC) set its midpoint 21 pips stronger at 6.3271 on Wednesday after the dollar weakened slightly overnight.

The PBOC expanded the yuan's allowable trading band against the dollar in mid-April, allowing it to rise of fall 1 percent every day, compared to 0.5 percent previously.

Despite the wider band, a series of markedly stronger midpoints - perhaps accompanied by behind-the-scenes yuan buying by the PBOC - could still pull the yuan's value higher, if authorities chose to take such steps.

But traders say the central bank is increasingly willing to let the yuan rise and fall in line with other global currencies.

"They are letting the market play a larger role in setting the exchange rate. The broad trend recently is for the dollar to strengthen and other currencies to weaken, so the yuan is also following this trend," said a trader at a joint-stock bank in Shanghai.

The yuan had its weakest month on record in May, weakening nearly 1 percent, and has slid further since then. The currency changed hands at 6.3695 per dollar near midday on Wednesday, 8 pips stronger than Tuesday's close and 5 pips weaker than its end-May close.

The yuan has now fallen 1.18 percent so far in 2012. China continues to run "twin surpluses" in trade and investment, but those surpluses have narrowed compared to previous years.

Moreover, traders and analysts say that additional corporate activity - not reflected in China's balance of payments data - is also weighing on the yuan this year.

Pessimism about slowing growth in the domestic economy and worries over the euro have caused some companies to buy dollars in the domestic market as a hedge against possible yuan depreciation, even if they have no immediate need for foreign currency.

Despite fears of a domestic slowdown, however, the Chinese economy is holding up better than many expected.

Trade data released over the weekend showed both imports and exports rising more swiftly than expected in May, with the trade surplus rising slightly to $18.7 billion, from $18.4 billion in May.

Investment and output data released a day earlier showed growth decelerating, but not as sharply as many had feared following a surprise interest-rate cut last week.

Offshore spot yuan traded at 6.3700 at midday, essentially in line with the onshore rate.

Copyright Reuters, 2012

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